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Grace Under Pressure by Rush
Grace Under Pressure by Rush
1984 | Rock
7
7.3 (4 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rush have always produced that sound and have largely done the whole prog rock thing. (1 more)
Clever musicians.
It's not on par with much of their stuff. (0 more)
  
Are You Experienced? by The Jimi Hendrix Experience
Are You Experienced? by The Jimi Hendrix Experience
1967 | Blues, Psychedelic, Rock
9
8.0 (2 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 15th greatest album of all time
Brilliant psychedelic rock album, including the familiar (for me thanks to Wayne's World) Foxy Lady and Fire, and also the superb prog-rock of 3rd Stone from the Sun.
  
(I'm) Stranded by The Saints Australia
(I'm) Stranded by The Saints Australia
1977 | Rock
(0 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"This reeks of youth, the sort of punky song I was never able to achieve when I was young. I had too much psychedelia and prog-rock in my DNA."

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BeardyJim (611 KP) rated Epoch by Of Allies in Music

Nov 2, 2021  
Epoch by Of Allies
Epoch by Of Allies
2021 | Alternative, Rock
Brilliant vocals (2 more)
I love the guitar work
"In Stasis" is my stand-out track
Melodic rock
I got into Of Allies last year, and speak to them often on Twitter - their latest album, Epoch, is an ethereal-sounding triumph of rock.

If you like your rock with a slightly prog feel to it, with powerful male vocals, and melodic guitar work, definitely check it out

My favourite tracks from the album so far are "In Stasis", "Play Dead" and "One19".
  
Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark by Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark
Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark by Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark
1980 | Alternative, Dance, Electronic, Pop, Rock
4.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"I'd agree that they were ahead of their time, they were quite minimalist really. Minimal electronic music. When I heard the b-side of 'Electricity', which was a track called 'Almost', that was like hearing Simon & Garfunkel, only in an electronic world. The songs were really simple, there was heaps of emotion in that particular track. It was a record that everybody had in my group, and we all played it at parties and danced to it. I say 'dance', I am not Saturday Night Fever, I'm working on it. I'm trying to break the moonwalk at the moment. 'Electricity', I didn't know what it was about, it just sounded really really exciting. They were a prog rock band in the old days apparently. I was telling the keyboard player about my admiration for 'Almost' and he said, "Yeah that was one of our old prog rock songs, there were seven people in the band"."

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You're Not Alone  by Andrew WK
You're Not Alone by Andrew WK
2018 | Rock
8
8.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Rating
Incessantly positive (0 more)
Pseudo spiritual (0 more)
Partying in the modern age
Andrew W K took some time out of music to become a motivational speaker and learn some new tricks.
This has a grand epic sound compared to his debut album (I Get Wet).
Still sounds like a party but has elements from 70s prog rock (without the infamous solos) and the pseudo spiritual influence is thankfully not religious.
The songs are interspersed with a few short motivational speeches which mainly serve as positive self help interludes.
  
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Nick McCabe recommended The Pearl by Harold Budd in Music (curated)

 
The Pearl by Harold Budd
The Pearl by Harold Budd
(0 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"I think I'd been looking for something like this for ages; something sculpted, but that manages to encompass the violent and everything in between. What I want out of music is everything really, and The Pearl is that. It's quite a dark record in places. It's easy to dismiss it as New Age. I think we're quite lucky at this point in time that people are less concerned about genres than they used to be. Even prog rock is getting a proper analysis now. I finally got around to listening to early Genesis recently and found it wasn't as disgusting as I expected it to be. A lot of music gets dismissed because of how it's tagged. But The Pearl has escaped that really, because of Eno. I was lucky living in St Helens, because it can seem like a bit of a cultural desert, but there were a couple of good resources. There used to be a really good record shop in the market that sold mostly prog rock stuff, but lots of psychedelic stuff, some of Tim Buckley's early stuff and I picked up The Pearl from there. It's amazing."

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Breakfast in America by Supertramp
Breakfast in America by Supertramp
1979 | Rock
9
9.5 (2 Ratings)
Album Rating
So many good toons (0 more)
Probably too old fashioned for today’s yoof! (0 more)
It’s da bomb!!
So many great tunes on this album. Supertramp is one of those prog rock groups that everyone knows a tune from, but couldn’t tell you the bands name.

Everyone knows the single Breakfast in America and The Logical Song nut there’s so much more to the album than just those 2 songs.

My favourite song is Take The Long Way Home, lots of harmonica and bouncy piano. The whole album is worth a nosey!
  
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Mike Allred recommended Gimme Shelter (1970) in Movies (curated)

 
Gimme Shelter (1970)
Gimme Shelter (1970)
1970 | Documentary, Music, Thriller
(0 Ratings)
Movie Favorite

"The British Invasion of the sixties fascinates me, as do the glitter rock and prog rock movements that followed. A Hard Day’s Night is my all-time favorite film, and the music made between 1964 and 1974 has remained my favorite. Most of that music is filled with power, liberation, and joy. But right in the middle of that ten-year period was this terrible event that seems to body-slam the “peace and love” vibe that preceded it. The Rolling Stones had recently lost founding member and icon Brian Jones and were moving on. Some genius decides to hire Hells Angels (with beer) for security at their concert at the Altamont Speedway, which results in the stabbing death of a concertgoer. It’s amazing that these events all come together in this eerie and compelling document. This film details the exact moment of “the end of an era.” Chilling."

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Pawn Hearts by Van Der Graaf Generator
Pawn Hearts by Van Der Graaf Generator
1971 | Rock
(0 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"It's another strange thing; you had to keep some records as secrets on the punk scene, but John Lydon was into [founding member of Van der Graaf Generator] Peter Hammill. There's an idea that people would hide their Genesis records and get out The Damned ones if people came round. I didn't hide mine, although I didn't play them to Ian when he came round. They're a funny band, Van der Graaf Generator. At the time, with Pawn Hearts, all of your mates would say: "Ooh, there's a track that's three days long… it's pixie stuff". But 'A Plague Of Lighthouse Keepers' is completely overblown, like a nightmare with saxophones. I suppose it's the ultimate prog-rock album: it's really overblown, but still of the terrifying. I really like Peter Hammill. He's another guy who's really unique - he has a really individual way of singing, and it's very raw."

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